Despite the ban on union activity in Iraq, and the hostility of both
U.S. occupation forces and the current Iraqi government, Iraq's union
movement has grown, and oil workers have had some success in
preventing the wholesale privatization of the country's oil industry
and its handover to foreign corporate control. Faleh says his union
recently won a victory when its members struck in Basra in opposition
to the oil privatization plan. "The government of Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki ordered the workers surrounded, and ordered the army to
attack and arrest the strikers," he says, "but the commander of the
Basra region refused and said he would "not arrest anyone who loves
Iraq." At the commander's urging, the government agreed to put off
action on an oil industry law until October, and to sit down and
negotiate with the union. Faleh called the action a "big victory" for
the union movement.

Iraqi Labor Leaders Blame US for the Bloodshed in Iraq and say Get Out!

Friday, 22 June 2007
By Dave Lindorff

Don't tell Faleh Abood Umara or Hashmeya Muhsin Hussein that you want
the U.S. to quit Iraq, but that you're worried about a resulting civil
war.

The two Iraqi labor leaders, currently in Philadelphia as part of a
U.S. tour sponsored by a coalition of American labor unions called
U.S. Labor Against the War, say the U.S. is the cause of all the
violence in Iraq, and argue that the sooner U.S. forces leave their
country, the sooner things will start to get better.

"Did the occupier find us fighting each other when they came to Iraq?"
asks Hashmeya, who is president of the Electric Utility Workers Union
of Iraq. "No. The fighting among Iraqis started two and a half years
after the Americans came."

Faleh, general secretary of the Southern Oil Company Union based in
Basra, agrees, saying that while the U.S. claims to be trying to quell
the violence, "actually, since the U.S. has come into Iraq, they have
done everything they could to encourage sectarian strife." He asks, if
Iraqis are just a bunch of sectarian fanatics, "How did we manage to
get along in the past?"

Faleh, whose own brother was killed in the wake of the US invasion of
Iraq, accuses the U.S. of adopting policies that encourage divisions
in Iraq, and of working covertly to foster more domestic violence.

Hashmeya, who regularly faces death threats, and threats to kidnap her
seven-year-old son, for her part accuses not just the U.S, but also
Britain, Israel, "and Iraq's neighbors" of all working covertly to
encourage the violence in Iraq. "They all have an interest in
destroying the country," she says angrily. A frequent international
traveler, she notes that Iraqi and U.S. border control authorities
make people leaving the country go through five or six checks, but
that entering the country requires just one perfunctory showing of a
passport. "They make it very easy for people to come into the
country," she says.

At the same time that they blame the U.S. for the chaos in their
country, Faleh and Hashmeya also say that the situation is being
misrepresented in the U.S. media, which focuses on the Iraqi-on-Iraqi
violence. Of an average 1000 attacks in Iraq each week, only about 30
are by Iraqis against other Iraqis. The rest are attacks on American
and British forces.

"We were happy to be rid of Saddam," says Faleh, "but now the U.S.
should get out of our country. Iraq's number one problem now is the
U.S. presence there."

The two union leaders, who both worked in the banned Iraqi labor
movement under Saddam Hussein before the U.S. invasion in 2003, note
that the U.S. conquest of their country did nothing to improve the
position of workers. Under the Coalition Provisional Authority headed
by L. Paul Bremer, a Saddam-era ban on labor unions was left on the
books, and continues to be in effect today. U.S. forces have fired on
and killed workers demonstrating for their rights, while a decree in
2005 authorized the seizing of all union property.

Despite the ban on union activity in Iraq, and the hostility of both
U.S. occupation forces and the current Iraqi government, Iraq's union
movement has grown, and oil workers have had some success in
preventing the wholesale privatization of the country's oil industry
and its handover to foreign corporate control. Faleh says his union
recently won a victory when its members struck in Basra in opposition
to the oil privatization plan. "The government of Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki ordered the workers surrounded, and ordered the army to
attack and arrest the strikers," he says, "but the commander of the
Basra region refused and said he would "not arrest anyone who loves
Iraq." At the commander's urging, the government agreed to put off
action on an oil industry law until October, and to sit down and
negotiate with the union. Faleh called the action a "big victory" for
the union movement.

Asked about talk in the U.S. of an attack on Iran, and about how such
an expansion of the war would impact the situation in Iraq, Faleh
said, "I don't think the U.S. will attack Iran. We think that they
have mutual interests in Iraq." Faleh added that the Iraqi union
movement has good relations with the Iranian labor movement.

He said a U.S. attack on Iran would have terrible consequences in
Iraq, because Iran would act to turn its backers in Iraq against U.S.
forces, leading to a huge increase in the violence in Iraq.

"We have come to America to ask you to work for withdrawal of all
American troops from Iraq," Hashmeya told the over 100 assembled union
and peace activists at their event in the Friends Center in
Philadelphia on Tuesday evening. "People have the right to choose
their own destiny. We are asking the U.S. to leave Iraq to its own
people."

   Media Note: The Philadelphia Inquirer, which has paid to send its
columnist Trudy Rubin all the way to Baghdad to interview Gen. David
Petraeus (her column claiming the so-called Bush "surge" has a "chance
to work" ran in today's paper)--didn't bother to send a reporter a
couple blocks downtown to cover the Iraqi union leaders' talk. Nor did
the Inquirer's sister paper, the Daily News, send a reporter.
Philadelphians were left with the one-sided view that the U.S. is
trying to stem the violence in Iraq.

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